The History of Mozilla Firefox
Gsurface writes "Flexbeta has an article based on the history of Mozilla Firefox. The article goes build-by-build of every Firefox release since the early Phoenix days noting some of the most significant changes in every release."
Isn't that normally called a changelog?
Free MacMini
The true history Jamie Zawinski.
From all the way back to...er...two and a half years ago?
Wow. Good thing we have that written down somewhere, are there even people still alive that remember that far back?
"Leo Fender was in a 'state of grace' when he designed the Stratocaster." -- Paul Reed Smith
There is a problem with the database that is preventing the site from working.
An email has been sent to the administrator notifying them of the problem. Please try again later.
That administrator is going to get a LOT of emails. Oh, and I believe that "problem" it's talking about is called Slashdot.
I'd be more interested in looking at a brief history of Internet Explorer, for the same reasons that they teach kids history in school. (to prevent it from repeating).
Slashdotted at two comments. I blame it all on those pesky "subscribers". Slashdotting the page before us commoners can do it.
What, are we not GOOD enough to slashdot FlexBeta?? HMMM?
'If you're flammable and have legs, you are never blocking a fire exit.'
Here you can learn a bit of the history of slashdot. Also, you can browse through some of the older slashdot posts http://slashdot.org">Here
- Teja
Let's hope for the day they can add "Firefox usage overtakes IE usage" to that page. Although it may not be perfect, Firefox (pheonix, firebird etc) has been revolutionary - and I believe it has generally increase people's awareness about the web.
Well done to all the developers involved in the developement. Keep up the good work.
Business Voyeur
http://www.mirrordot.org/stories/8edf94739c87f105c f8051329b6b6dd7/index.html Mirror
Technically, it started with Netscape, then moved on to Mozilla. At the end of 2001, some Mac OS X developers came along and decided to create a stand-alone browser for OS X based on Mozilla, without the extras like the HTML editor, IRC client, email client, etc. This browser was first released as Chimera in the beginning of 2002. Chimera steadily got more and more popular under OS X, and ended up being _the_ browser for OS X users until Apple finally released Safari. After the success of Chimera in its first few months, Phoenix was conceived as, effectively, an attempt to combine the simplicity of Chimera with the cross-platform capability and UI of the main Mozilla browser. In other words, Phoenix didn't just pop up out of the blue, it had an inspiration that (sadly) most people seem to have forgotten.
Yes, I am using what Chimera became (Camino), and yes, perhaps I am a bit of a fanboy of it. It's an extremely solid browser, and despite its popularity waning due to Safari, it's still being developed, and I'm happy with its progress.
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